What little we know about early Chinese immigrants to Maine comes from sources such as this ad in a Portland City Directory for the "New Chinaman's Tea Store."
Ah Foo Fong, who came to Portland in 1860 to work for George C. Shaw in his store on Middle Street, owned the tea shop at 333 Congress Street.
Hop Ling is at left with an unidentified man.
By 1890, Chinese men lived throughout Maine, but new immigrants could no longer come to the U.S. from China.
The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 was the first American immigration prohibition against an entire country.
The lure of the "Gold Mountain," as America was called, prompted many Chinese to try to evade the Exclusion Acts by entering the U.S. through Canada.
Men who already were in the U.S. could stay, but were prohibited from bringing wives and families to America to join them.
Most of Maine's early Chinese residents, therefore, were men who lived in a bachelor society, even though many had wives and families in China.
Many Chinese men in Maine joined Christian churches where they participated in Sunday Schools, in order to learn English and have an opportunity to socialize.
Wong My was a student in the Chinese Sunday School at South Parish Congregational Church in Augusta. The church opened a Chinese Sunday School in the 1880s.
Wong My, Sam Sing and the Chinese Sunday School class of Essie Wills from the South Parish Congregational Church, Augusta, at an outing about 1890.
This Chinese Sunday School student in Augusta was fortunate to live in an area where there were enough Chinese men for such a class.
Many of Maine's Chinese lived in isolation, owning a laundry in a small town where they were the only Chinese person for miles around.
Wong My and Sam Sing, members of Essie Wills' Chinese Sunday School class at South Parish Congregational Church in Augusta, pose in their American finery.
Portland also had a large enough Chinese community for a Chinese Sunday School.
Here, an unidentified member of the Chinese Sunday School class at First Baptist Church in Portland posed for a portrait.
The church held a Chinese Sunday School from 1902 into the 1950s. First Baptist Church now is home to the Chinese Gospel Church of Portland.
Portland had a vibrant Chinese community. The Portland newspapers reported on the celebration of the Chinese New Year in 1895.
Between 1914 and 1920 Portland had a Chinese Masonic Lodge.
The Chee King Tong opened on Free Street in 1922 and lasted until 1927. "Tong" usually was associated with Chinese gangs, but the word means "meeting hall" or "club house."
The Second Parish Presbyterian Church in Portland opened its Chinese Sunday School in the 1880s, about 20 years before the First Baptist Church's Chinese Sunday School, where this unidentified man had his photo taken.
Another unidentified Chinese immigrant at the First Baptist Sunday School.
Christian training, along with socializing and learning English, were popular among Chinese immigrants.
One Chinese man, Frank Chin Guey, returned home to China as a Christian missionary in 1913.
Members of the Chinese Sunday School of First Baptist Church of Portland pose with their teachers during a picnic on a Casco Bay Island, probably in the mid to late 1920s.
From the beginning, Maine's Chinese community was mostly self-employed.
Daniel Cough opened a general store in Tremont in the 1860s. Ah Tee Lam was a cigar maker who opened a tobacco shop in Portland and, in 1880, opened the first known Chinese restaurant at 1 Custom House Wharf in Portland.
Ah Foo Fong opened his Portland tea shop by 1871. In 1877, 14-year-old Sam Lee opened the first Chinese laundry in Portland.
Lee Goon, center, owner of a laundry at 244 Main St., Biddeford, poses with four bakers from Riley and MacFarlane Bakery, 248 Main St.
The photo suggests a friendly relationship among these working-class neighbors.
By 1920 there were about 30 Chinese laundries in Portland alone. Solitary Chinese owned laundries in places such as Cherryfield, Eden, Skowhegan, Fairfield, Rockland, Ellsworth, and Rumford among many others.
Many of Maine's Chinese laundrymen operated from and lived in two-room storefronts.
In January 1903 Maine laundrymen formed the Maine Laundrymen's Association to fix uniform prices for doing laundry and to provide a social outlet.
Even though there were about a hundred Chinese laundrymen in Maine at that time, none were asked to join this Association.
Among the Chinese hand laundries in Maine -- in nearly every town about the time of World War I -- was the Charley Goon Laundry in Sanford, shown at left.
Chin Kow was a member of the First Baptist Church Chinese Sunday School in Portland in 1911 when this photo was taken.
He often was called "The General" by his friends and customers at his Chinese hand laundry, which he ran until 1966.
By 1910 many Maine towns had added a Chinese restaurant to the community.
This is the menu from the Pekin Restaurant in Bangor, incorporated in 1924 by Wong J. Jones, Chin Dong, Gong Yee, Gam Woo, Chin Aui, and Chin Hun.
Chin Dong was president of the corporation and Wong J. Jones was treasurer.
A photograph of Main Street in Lewiston, taken in the early years of the twentieth century, shows a Chinese-American restaurant that advertised Chop Suey as well as "regular" (American) dishes.
It may have been the Oriental Restaurant.
William Wong was a cook at the Oriental Restaurant , 28 Monument Square, Portland, when this photo was taken.
William Wong was popular with the neighborhood's Chinese children.
With him in the photo are, front row, Annie Wong and Jack Wong; second row from left, Ruth Wong, Lilli Wong, Laura Wong, Carolyn Wong, Helen Wong, and William Wong; and back row, Ruby Wong and William Wong
Many of Portland's Chinese residents lived in Monument Square (where Wong worked) and on Center Street in the 1920s and 1930s.
Glass from the Sing's Chinese Restaurant in Bangor, about 1980.
Dogan Goon served as a private in U.S. Army Medical Department in World War I. He enlisted June 24, 1918 and was honorably discharged on January 13, 1919.
Even though Chinese immigrants were not allowed to become U.S. citizens because of the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, they served in the armed forces.
Goon came to Portland around 1914, and later arrested for violating the Chinese Exclusion Act. His case went to trail, where he gained permission to stay in the U.S. by convincing the courts he had been born in California (although he was likely born in China.) His citizenship status was reconfirmed after this discharge from the Army. He and his wife operated a laundry on Forest Avenue at Woodfords Corner.
Chinese immigrant I Nee Lee, living in Camden, owned and operated a laundry, but also painted local scenes.
This scene of Turnpike Drive, or Route 52, with Megunticook Lake at the left was painted sometime in the 1930s.
Chinese immigrant I Nee Lee painted this scene of Camden Harbor in 1933.
He was born in Hong Kong about 1888 and emigrated to the United States. He operated a laundry in Camden in the 1920s and 1930s and moved to Bangor about 1936 where he died on July 21, 1939.
Quoy Wong, his wife, Grace, and their children Charles, Albert, Helen, and Grace posed for a family portrait in 1922. Quoy Wong owned the Oriental Restaurant in Bangor.
Once the first Chinese women arrived in Maine, just before 1900, a number of Chinese families began to appear, mostly in Maine's cities.
Hing Wong, who worked at the Oriental Restaurant in Monument Square, Portland, posed with his wife, Woo Shee Wong, and their children, Carolyn, Lilli, and William Wong in 1923.
Several of the early Chinese immigrant families still live in Maine like the Chin family of Lewiston and the Wong family of Bangor.
This tunic and these pants were brought from China by Toy Len Goon after her marriage to Dogan Goon when she came to live in Portland.
The Goons owned a laundry on Forest Avenue in Portland at Woodfords Corner.
Four of the children of Dogan and Toy Len Goon play with a car at their home at Arlington Place at Woodfords Corner in Portland.
The children are, from left, Doris, Josephine, Richard, and Edward.
Lee Wing Wong, who worked at the Oriental Restaurant in Monument Square, Portland, and Chin Shee, a native of Canton, China, had four daughters in 1927.
They are, from left, rear, Ruby and Helen, and front, Laura and Ruth.
Carolyn Wong and William Wong, children of Hing Wong and Woo Shee Wong of Portland, are pictured in 1923.
Arthur Goon, son of Chinese immigrant to Portland Dogan Goon, served in the U.S. Navy in 1954.
His father served in the U.S. Army during World War I, an era when Chinese persons were not allowed to become U.S. citizens.
Toy Len Goon, widow of Dogan Goon, at her hand-operated presser in her laundry at 615 Forest Ave., Portland, after she was named Maine Mother of the Year in April 1952.
Her daughter, Doris, is in the background.
Mrs. Goon was 57 when she won the honor. Her husband died in 1940 and she raised five sons and three daughters, the eldest of whom was 17, by herself. She was later named American Mother of the Year.
Toy Len Goon, American Mother of the Year, New York, 1952
Item 10367 infoMaine Historical Society
Toy Len Goon, a native of Canton, China, was named American Mother of the Year in 1952.
Here, she is the star attraction of a parade in New York's Chinatown.
She married Dogan Goon and came to the U.S. in 1922. They had eight children. When he died in 1940, she continued to raise the children (the oldest of whom was 17) and operate the family laundry at Woodfords Corner in Portland.
She was born August 14, 1891 in China and died May 27, 1993.
Many members of Maine's Chinese community protested the actions of the Peoples Republic of China when it crushed the pro-democracy student rally in Tiananmen Square in Beijing in 1989.
This protest was in Monument Square, Portland.